Canada's electricity generation landscape is changing. In this
blog I present two charts that make this point rather convincingly.
The first chart shows per-capita electricity demand in capita, and the
second chart shows the composition of electricity generation.

click on image for high-resolution PDF version

Per-capita electricity demand has actually leveled off a little in recent
years, and in particular after the economic recession in 2008. The changes
are not huge, but in 2015 per-capita electricity consumption is actually below the level it was in 1990. In part this is due to improved energy efficiency, such as switching to LED lighting. Another part is due to changes in industrial
activity: composition (which industries), scale (size of industries), and
technique (energy use per dollar of output). Canada's per-capita
electricity is much higher than in many other countries, including
the United States. This does not mean that Canada is profligate. Instead,
Canadian use relatively cheap hydro-power to heat their homes much more
than in other countries where electricity is both more expensive and
less clean. For households there has not been much of a switch in
the composition of energy use. Electricity use has not declined
much; the share of natural gas has increased, while the share of heating oil
has declined. Energy efficiency in the residential sector is
improving, according to research conducted by Natural Resources Canada. Residential use of electricity for space heating amounts to about a quarter,
while about half of heating demand is covered by natural gas. Electricity also provides a quarter of residential water heating needs, while more than two-thirds are covered by natural gas.

When analyzing the overall change in energy and electricity use in the industrial sector, it is useful to decompose this change into several components:

scale effect: changes in energy use to increased or decreased
level of economic activity;

composition effect: changes in energy use due to shifts
in the composition of economic activity, especially from energy-intensive
to non-intensive sectors of the economy;

technique effect: improvements in energy efficiency.

Natural Resources Canada estimates that the increase in total
energy use in Canada's economy between 1990 and 2013 was the result
of a large positive scale effect that was offset in half by a composition
effect (Canada's economy shifting to less energy-intensive sectors) and
a smaller technique effect. The picture for electricity is
somewhat similar. Industrial electricity use accounts for 44%
of total electricity use, commercial use for 21%, and residential use
for 33%. Transportation and agricultural use makes up the rest.

The second chart decomposes electricity generation in Canada by
fuel type between 1990 and 2015. Overall, hydroelectricity continues
to provide roughly 60% of Canada's electricity demand. British
Columbia, Quebec, Manitoba, and Newfoundland and Labrador all produce
more than 85-95% of their electricity from hydro. Canada is also a net
exporter of electricity. Roughly a tenth of output is transmitted to
our southern neighbours. The share of nuclear power has held
relatively steady over the last decades. However, there are three
major trends.

click on image for high-resolution PDF version

(1.) Since the early 2000's, the share of coal is rapidly declining as
Ontario has been phasing out its coal plants. Coal power plants
account for a sizable share of generation capacity only in three
provinces: Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Nova Scotia.
(2.) Most of the decline in coal is compensated by an increase in
natural gas, which produces fewer emissions than coal, and has
been boosted by low prices due to the fracking revolution.
(3.) Renewable energies, mostly wind, are making inroads but starting
from a low level. Overall, the phasing out of coal will continue.

Environmentally, phasing out coal is a major gain. It reduces
Canada's carbon emissions, but also emissions of sulfur dioxide and
nitrogen oxides. Many of the coal plants that have already been shut
down were old and particularly strong emitters. Many of the remaining
plants are of a newer and more efficient generation. Electricity
generation accounts for only a small share of total nitrogen
oxides emissions in Canada, but for a sizable share of sulfur
dioxide emissions in Canada. While total nitrogen oxides
emissions have decreased somewhat, sulfur dioxide emissions in Canada
have decreased by 66% between 1990 and 2015. Retiring coal plants has
contributed much to this decline in sulfur dioxide emissions.

The dominance of hydro-power in Canada is likely to continue, as new major projects near completion
or are under construction: Muskrat Falls in Labrador [824 MW], Keeyask Generating Station in Manitoba [695 MW], and Site C dam in British Columbia [1,100 MW]. However, wind power is expanding rapidly, with Ontario, Quebec, and Alberta
accounting for most of the installed capacity.